Leadership

5

Copyright © 2001 by Donald Clark. All Rights Reserved.

May 15, 2001: Version 1

Shareware material, see http://www.nwlink.com/~donclark/documents/leadershipshareware.html

Table Of Contents

1 - The Pyramid of Leadership 6

I - Leadership Competencies 8

2 - Leadership Abilities 9

Leadership Framework – Be, Know, & Do 10

Two Most Important Keys of Leadership 11

Factors of leadership 11

Environment 12

Leadership Models 14

Leadership Styles 16

Forces 18

Leader Use of Consideration and Structure 18

The Process of Great Leadership 19

Power and Leadership 19

3 - Visioning 22

Getting To the Future 22

The Six Steps of Goal Setting 23

Supervising 25

Inspiring Your Employees 25

4 - Create and Lead Teams 27

Developing Teams 28

Elements of a Team 30

Six Steps to Team Problem Solving 31

Team-player Styles 32

Team Leadership 33

Are you ready to be a team leader? 34

Problems Team Face 34

When To Build Teams 35

5 - Foster Conflict Resolutions (win-win) 36

Performance 36

Motivation 37

Counseling 41

Performance Appraisals 43

Workplace Violence 45

Final Thoughts 46

6 - Assess Situations Quickly and Accurately 48

Planning 48

Executing 49

Problem Solving 50

7 - Coaching and Training 51

Learning 52

Steps to Training and Coaching: 53

Training and Coaching Tips 55

8 - Implement Employee Involvement Strategies 57

Employee Involvement 57

CPI Procedure 58

Analysis Phase 59

Design Phase 63

Development Phase 64

Implementation Phase 64

Evaluation Phase 65

II - Core Competencies 68

9 - Teamwork 69

Forming, Storming, Norming, Performing, Adjourning 70

Team Verses Group 72

Working With Other Team Members 73

Team Checklist 75

10 - Communicating 77

Barriers to Communication 78

Active Listening 79

Feedback 80

Nonverbal Behaviors of Communication 81

Hints on Effective Communication 81

Meetings 82

Presentations 85

11 - Self –Direction 93

Time Wasters 93

Time Savers 94

A Simple Time Management Plan 95

The Big Picture 96

Organization and Task Focus 96

12 - Creative problem Solving 98

Brainstorming Steps 98

Brainstorming variations 99

Selecting a Solution 99

Delphi Decision Making 101

Dialectic Decision Making 101

A Three-Step Radical Thinking Approach 103

13 - Interpersonal Skills 105

The Challenge of Embracing Diversity 106

Becoming the Best 107

Diversity and Leaders 107

How We Tend to Categorize People 108

Culture 108

Diversity Goals 108

Training Diversity 109

Attitudes and Diversity 109

Diversity Team Building 110

14 - Manage Client Relationships 112

Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs 112

Herzberg's Hygiene and Motivational Factors 114

Theory X and Theory Y 115

Keirsey Temperament Sorter 116

Existence/Relatedness/Growth (ERG) 117

Expectancy Theory 117

15 - Build Appropriate Relationships 119

Elements of Organizational Behavior 119

Models of Organizational Behavior 119

Social Systems, Culture, and Individualization 120

Organization Development 121

Quality of Work Life 122

16 - Flexibility 125

Change Acceptance 126

Hawthorne Effect 127

Group Belonging 127

Leading the Change Effort 128

17 - Professionalism 129

Leadership Traits 130

Attributes 131

Perspectives of Character and Traits 131

18 - Financial Awareness 134

Return On Investment (ROI) – 134

Tangible Benefits 135

Holy Grails 135

Capital Spending 136

Federal Regulations 136

Improve Efficiency 136

Riders 136

Employee Developmental Programs 136

III - Professional Competencies 138

19 - Business Acumen and Technical Competency 139

Receiving Feedback 139

Mentoring 139

Experience 140

Final Thoughts 140

Appendix A 146

Steps for Conducting the AAR 147

Glossary 148

Reference 155

1 - The Pyramid of Leadership

"The very essence of leadership is that you have to have a vision. It's got to be a vision you articulate clearly and forcefully on every occasion." - Theodore Hesburgh, President of the University of Notre Dame

Leadership translates vision into reality by inspiring followers to want to experience the change process. And to influence their followers to willingly jump into that experience, leaders need a specific set of competencies[1] to guide their actions. Although competencies will always differ from one leader to the next, having a core set to draw from increases the chance for success. These competencies can be thought of as the inner tools for motivating employees, directing systems and processes, and guiding the business towards common goals that allow the organization to increase its value. This leadership guide is broken into three main parts that form a “Pyramid of Leadership” (see figure 1):

·  Core Competencies form the foundation of leadership. Without a solid base, the sides of the pyramid will soon crumble away.

·  Leadership Competencies form the basic structure (walls) that separates leaders from bosses by building the knowledge and skills required for driving the organization towards the cutting edge of its business. Without these competencies, a leader has a shallow base from which to work, or as Scott Adams, the creator of Dilbert best characterizes it, "a pointy-head boss."

·  Professional Competencies add depth to the pyramid. The main driver of these competencies arrives from experiences and LEARNING from these experiences. While a person might have a firm grasp on the core and leadership competencies, it is only through trial and error, and later through reflection to increase the depth of those experiences, that an average leader grows into a good leader. Each organization requires a different set of professional competencies for each leadership position.


Figure 1

I - Leadership Competencies

Managers are people who do things right, while leaders are people who do the right thing. - Warren Bennis, Ph.D. "On Becoming a Leader"

The following competencies will be discussed in this first section:

·  Leadership abilities - Displays attributes that make people glad to follow. Provides a feeling of trust. Rallies the troops and builds morale when the going gets tough.

·  Visioning - Applies effort to increase productiveness in areas needing the most improvement. Creates and set goals (visions). Senses the environment by using personal sway to influence subordinates and peers. Gain commitment by influencing team to set objectives and buy in on the process. Reinforces change by embracing it (prevents relapse into prior state).

·  Create and Lead Teams - Develops high-performance teams by establishing a spirit of cooperation and cohesion for achieving goals.

·  Foster Conflict Resolutions (win-win) - Effectively handles disagreements and conflicts. Settles disputes by focusing on solving the problems, without offending egos. Provides support and expertise to other leaders with respect to managing people. Evaluates the feasibility of alternative dispute resolution mechanisms.

·  Assess Situations Quickly and Accurately - Takes charge when the situation demands it. Make the right things happen on time.

·  Coach and Train Peers and Subordinates - Recognizes that learning happens at every opportunity (treats mistakes as a learning event). Provides performance feedback, coaching, and career development to teams and individuals to maximize their probability of success.

·  Implement Employee Involvement Strategies - Develops ownership by bringing employees in on the decision making and planning process. Provides the means to enable employee success, while maintaining the well being of the organization. Develops processes to engage employees in achieving the objectives of the organization. Empower employees by giving them the authority to get things accomplished in the most efficient and timely manner.

2 - Leadership Abilities

One can never consent to creep when one feels an impulse to soar. - Helen Keller

Good leaders are made not born. If you have the desire and willpower, you can become an effective leader. Good leaders develop through a never-ending process of self-study, education, training, and experience. This guide will help you through that process.

To inspire your team into higher levels of teamwork, there are certain things you must be, know, and, do. These do not come naturally, but are acquired through continual work and study. The best leaders are continually working and studying to improve their leadership skills.

Leadership is a complex process by which a person influences others to accomplish a mission, task, or objective and directs the organization in a way that makes it more cohesive and coherent. A person carries out this process by applying his or her leadership attributes (belief, values, ethics, character, knowledge, and skills). Although your position as a manager, supervisor, lead, etc. gives you the authority to accomplish certain tasks and objectives in the organization, this power does not make you a leader...it simply makes you the boss. Leadership makes people want to achieve high goals and objectives, while, on the other hand, bosses tell people to accomplish a task or objective.

Bass' (1989 & 1990) theory of leadership states that there are three explanations on how people become leaders:

·  Trait Theory - Some personality traits may lead people naturally into leadership roles. We have all met a few people like this, such as a High School coach, scout leader, teacher, or a good boss. There are a very few people who have a natural talent for leading others.

·  Great Events Theory - A crisis or important event may cause a person to rise to the occasion, which brings out extraordinary leadership qualities in an ordinary person.

·  Transformational Leadership Theory - People can choose to become leaders. People can learn leadership skills. This is the most widely accepted theory today and the premise on which this guide is based.

When a person is deciding if he respects you as a leader, he does not think about your attributes. He observes what you do so that he can know who you really are. He uses this observation to tell if you are an honorable and trusted leader or a self-serving tyrant who misuses her authority to look good and be promoted. Self serving leaders are not as effective because their employees only obey them, not follow them. They succeed in many areas because they present a good image to their seniors at the expense of their team.

The basis of good leadership is honorable character and selfless service to your organization. In your followers’ eyes, your leadership is everything you do that effects the organization's objectives and their well being. A respected leader concentrates on what she is [be] (beliefs and character), what she knows (job, tasks, human nature), and what she does (implement, motivate, provide direction).

What makes a person want to follow a leader? People want to be guided by those they respect and who have a clear sense of direction. To gain respect, they must be ethical. A sense of direction is achieved by conveying a strong vision of the future.

Leadership Framework – Be, Know, & Do

If you are a leader that can be trusted, then the people around you will learn to respect you. To be a good leader, there are things that you must be, know, and do (U.S. Army, 1973). These fall under the Leadership Framework:

·  BE

  1. A professional. Seek responsibility and take responsibility for your actions. Search for ways to guide your organization to new heights. And when things go wrong, they will eventually, do not blame others. Analyze the situation, take corrective action, and move on to the next challenge.
  2. A professional who possesses good character traits. Develop good traits within yourself, such as honesty, competence, candor, commitment, integrity, courage, straightforward, imagination. Develop good character traits within your team that will help them carry out their professional responsibilities.

·  KNOW

  1. The four factors of leadership - follower, leader, communication, situation.
  2. Yourself. Know yourself and seek self-improvement. In order to know yourself, you have to understand your be, know, and do, attributes. Seeking self-improvement means continually strengthening your attributes. This can be accomplished through reading, self-study, classes, etc.
  3. Human nature. Know human nature and the importance of sincerely caring for your workers.
  4. Your job. Be technically proficient. As a leader, you must know your job and have a solid familiarity with your employees' jobs. Train your people as a team. Although many supervisors call their organization, department, section, etc., a team; they are not really teams...they are just groups of people doing their jobs.
  5. Your organization. Use the full capabilities of your organization. By developing a team spirit, you will be able to employ your organization, department, section, etc. to its fullest capabilities.

·  DO

  1. Provide direction. Make sound and timely decisions. Use good problem solving, decision-making, and planning tools. Keep your team informed. Know how to communicate with your team, seniors, and other essential people within the organization.
  2. Implement. Develop a sense of responsibility in your team. Ensure that tasks are understood, supervised, and accomplished. Communication is the key to this responsibility.
  3. Motivate. Set the example. Be a good role model for you employees. They must not only hear what they are expected to do, but also see. Know your team and look out for their well being.

Two Most Important Keys of Leadership

A Hay's study examined over 75 key components of employee satisfaction. They found that trust and confidence in leaders were the single most reliable predictors of employee satisfaction in an organization. Effective communication by leaders in three critical areas was the key to winning organizational trust and confidence:

·  Helping employees understand the company's overall business strategy.

·  Helping employees understand how they contribute to achieving key business objectives.

·  Sharing information with employees on both how the company is doing and how an employee's own division is doing - relative to strategic business objectives.

So basically, you must be trustworthy and you have to be able to communicate a vision of where you are going. Notice how the "Principles of Leadership" in the next section closely ties in with this.

Factors of leadership

The four major factors of leadership are the follower, leader, communication, and situation:

Follower

Different people require different styles of leadership. For example, a new hire requires more supervision than an experienced employee. A person with a poor attitude requires a different approach than one with a high degree of motivation. You must know your team! The fundamental starting point is having a good understanding of human nature: needs, emotions, and motivation. You must know your employees' be, know, and do attributes.